Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 Source: Sun Journal, The (NC) Copyright: 2008, Freedom ENC Communications Contact: http://www.newbernsunjournal.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1733 Author: Sue Book COALITION FIGHTING SUBSTANCE ABUSE A webcast by the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America on Thursday will explore the role of geography in drug abuse prevention. Every community - from the largest to the smallest - is presently faced with drug abuse problems, said Judy Hills, director of economic and community development at the East Carolina Council of Governments. This webcast assembles a panel of experts to talk about the tools to deal with this issue. Included are Alvin Brooks, president of the Ad-Hoc Group Against Crime in Kansas City; Charles Reynolds, senior public health analyst on substance abuse prevention for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; and Shawnee Wright, Community Coordinator for Partners for Prevention in Allegany County, N.Y. The 1 to 2 p.m. Thursday webcast will be live at www.MCTFT.com and at www.cadca.org and can be viewed at no cost. In Craven, Pamlico, Jones and Carteret counties, it may help to better solidify the efforts of the Coastal Coalition for Substance Abuse Prevention, an initiative of the United Way of Coastal Carolina with the aid of the East Carolina Council. The four-county volunteer task force has been organized for more than a year but Coordinator Anne Hardison came on board in mid June to head the program. She was hired through a grant from the N.C. Coalition Institute funded by the N.C. General Assembly. Hardison took the position after serving as the Carteret County Healthy Carolinians director. She said the $800,000 appropriated for eight N.C. programs coordinated by Wake Forest University is the first state money addressing drug abuse prevention by attempting to change the environment of cultural acceptance of things like underage drinking and illegal use of prescription drugs. "One of the programs is called 'Safe Homes,'" Hardison said. It would ask parents to keep prescription drugs locked up. "Go out and start looking at signs, billboards, and the things promoting alcohol," she said. "Those are the signals we are sending our children. We need to tell them to wait until you are 21." Hardison said the damage to young people from early alcohol use is documented in numerous studies, particularly a pattern of drinking alcohol before they are 15. The brain is still developing then and that is still going on until 21 in late bloomers, she said. "The information is out there that we need to educate ourselves and our communities," Hardison said. "The abuse of prescription drugs results in overdoses and deaths. Young people are out there experimenting with illicit drugs as well as combining them with prescription drugs. They don't know the effects. They are playing with fire." Hardison said volunteers from smaller task forces in all four counties, about 95 in all, will meet in Pollocksville at 3 p.m. Aug. 6 to start collecting data and trying to get "Communities that Care" youth surveys to determine a base line data. Working for environmental change is a very different approach, Hardison said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin